BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to blends of ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer with an amorphous
polyamide component and their use as a barrier layer in thermoformed multilayer containers
and other applications.
[0002] Blends of ethylene vinyl alcohol polymers with polyamides in general are known, and
have been used in packaging applications as barriers to inhibit the passage of atmospheric
oxygen or other gases.
[0003] European patent application 0 305 146 discloses a blend of about 70 to about 95 percent
by weight of an ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer having a copolymerized ethylene content
of about 20 to about 60 mole percent and a degree of saponification of at least about
90 %, and about 5 to about 30 percent by weight of an amorphous polyamide. The composition
is useful as a barrier layer in thermoformed containers.
[0004] European patent application 0 309 095 discloses a blend of about 50 to about 95 weight
percent of an amorphous polyamide and about 5 to about 50 weight percent of a vinyl
alcohol polymer having a copolymerized ethylene content of 0 to about 60 mol percent
and a degree of saponification of at least about 90%. The blends have oxygen barrier
properties which are relatively independent of humidity. Packaging films, laminates,
and containers prepared therefrom are disclosed.
[0005] European Patent Application 0 380 864 discloses a blend of ethylene vinyl alcohol
copolymer and a polyamide blend of about 30 to about 90 percent by weight of at least
one amorphous polyamide and about 10 to about 70 percent by weight of at least one
semicrystalline polyamide which is miscible with the ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer.
The blends are useful for forming films, multiple layer structures, and formed structures
prepared by stretching or thermoforming such multiple layer structures.
[0006] Japanese patent application 53-49050 discloses a blend of ethylene vinyl alcohol
copolymer (EVOH) with 5 to 40 weight percent polyamide. The EVOH contains 20 - 50
mole percent copolymerized ethylene, and is saponified at least 90%. The polyamides
disclosed include a copolymer of hexamethylene diamine with isophthalic and terephthalic
acids, in mole ratios of 100/0 to 50/50. The blend is formed into a film, which possesses
gas barrier properties. The barrier performance of the film is purported not to decline
even in highly humid atmospheres.
[0007] U. S. 3,726,034 discloses mixtures of 70-99% polyamide and up to 30% of a hydroxyl
containing polyolefin. The polyamides "consist of linear unbranched polymer chains
containing no additional functional groups." Exemplified are blends of nylon 6 and
EVOH.
[0008] U. S. 4,079,850 discloses a multilayer blow molded container, which contains a layer
which may be EVOH, polyamide, or various blends, providing gas barrier properties.
The polyamides which are mentioned are nylon 6, nylon 66, and nylon 12.
[0009] U. S. 4,427,825 discloses a composition of matter useful for making films, of polyamide
and 1-65% EVOH. Nylons with melting points greater than 175°C are preferred, such
as nylon 11 or nylon 12.
[0010] U. S. 4,500,677 discloses a resin composition comprising a mixture of two EVOH resins
and a polyamide resin. The ratio of the EVOH resins to the nylon resin can be between
95:5 and 5:95. Nylon 6, nylon 6,6 and other polyamides having "linear alkylene group[s]"
are specifically mentioned.
[0011] Ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer (EVOH) is commonly used in the form of a thin layer
together with thicker layers of less expensive structural materials, for example,
polypropylene or polyethylene terephthalate, in order to form a structure which is
resistant to the passage of atmospheric oxygen or other gasses. In order to make containers
or oriented films of such multilayer structures a solid phase thermoforming process
is often used. However, EVOH cannot be formed at the relatively lower temperatures
required for the thermoforming of many common structural materials without rupturing
the EVOH layer, resulting in a loss of overall barrier performance. The present invention
provides a modified EVOH composition which may be used in thermoformed multilayer
structures to avoid the above mentioned problems, and without substantially sacrificing
the excellent gas barrier properties of EVOH. It may also be used in other applications
where stretching is required during the processing of the article, such as in shrink
films.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0012] The present invention provides a blend consisting essentially of about 5 to about
95 percent by weight of an ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer having a copolymerized
ethylene content of about 20 to about 60 mole percent and a degree of saponification
of at least about 90 %, and about 95 to about 5 percent by weight of a polyamide blend
consisting essentially of about 35 to about 95 percent by weight of at least one amorphous
polyamide having a glass transition temperature of up to about 160°C and about 5 to
about 65 percent by weight of at least one semicrystalline polyamide which has a methylene
group/amide group ratio of about 5.5 to about 7.5 and which forms separate domains
when blended with said ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer. The present invention also
provides films prepared of such blends, multiple layer structures including a layer
of such blend, and formed structures prepared by stretching or thermoforming such
multiple layer structures. The invention also includes oriented multilayer shrink
films which include at least one layer of such blends.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0013] Materials and structures with barrier properties are important in many applications.
Of particular interest are packaging materials which are barriers to the penetration
of gases, such as oxygen, carbon dioxide, and various aromas.
[0014] In many packaging applications EVOH resins are used as relatively thin components
of multilayer structures or containers. Usually the major parts of the structures
are made of less expensive "structural" materials, bound to the EVOH layer by adhesive
layers. The fabrication process in converting multilayer structures into final products
often involves a mechanical deformation operation, such as orientation, thermoforming,
or stretching in general, depending on the final form of the desired structure. However,
EVOH generally exhibits very poor drawability, that is, the ability to be stretched
or deformed uniformly at a temperature below its melting point. Quite often the stretching
or deformation operation induces cracks, discontinuity or thinning ("neckdown") in
the EVOH layer. As a result stretched or deformed multilayer structures which include
a layer of EVOH resin often exhibit inferior barrier properties.
[0015] For the purposes of this invention, a deformation process includes any process for
forming a shaped article (e.g., a film or a container) which (a) is distinct from
the initial melt processing step and (b) which is performed at a temperature which
is elevated above room temperature but lower than the melting point of the polymeric
structural material. Casting of a film would not be a deformation process according
to this definition because it is a melt processing step; vacuum-forming a film to
prepare a container would be a deformation process. Making a film by a blown tubular
process may or may not be a deformation process, depending on the temperature of the
tubing or bubble at the location where blowing occurs. Examples of deformation processes
include thermoforming (but excluding melt phase thermoforming), vacuum-forming, solid
phase pressure forming, co-injection blow molding, co-injection stretch blow molding,
tube extrusion followed by stretching, scrapless forming, forging, and tubular or
flat sheet oriented film processes. Examples of articles that can be prepared using
deformation processes are films and containers such as bottles, jars, cans, bowls,
trays, dishes, pouches, oriented films, and shrink films. Deformation of polymeric
materials is not only a way to attain such final shaped articles, but may also be
a means to enhance barrier properties, mechanical properties, or even optical properties.
[0016] The temperature of the deformation step is usually determined by the "forming temperature"
of the structural material, that is, the temperature at which it can be deformed.
The forming temperature of a polymer is not readily related to any material properties
of the polymer, except that it is normally higher than the T
g of the polymer. In addition, this temperature is affected by the magnitude and rate
of deformation of the particular process employed. The forming temperature of a given
material for a given process can be readily determined by a person skilled in the
art with a minimum of experimentation. Many structural materials have a lower forming
temperature than that of EVOH, and it may be desirable for many reasons to conduct
a molding operation at as low a temperature as possible. Furthermore, it may be desirable
to reach an extent of deformation as high as possible. Thus the temperatures used
for the deformation of such multilayer structures may be so low or the extent of deformation
may be so high that the drawability of the EVOH layer is exceeded. As a consequence
the desired deformed articles cannot be made without tearing or rupturing of the EVOH
layer. The resulting discontinuities in the EVOH layer result in inferior oxygen barrier
performance of the resulting article. An object of this invention is to provide a
modified EVOH composition which may be used in deformed multilayer structures to avoid
the above mentioned problems, and without substantially sacrificing the excellent
gas barrier properties of EVOH. This modified composition is a blend of EVOH with
an amorphous polyamide and a semicrystalline polyamide.
[0017] The first component of the composition of the present invention is an ethylene vinyl
alcohol copolymer. The EVOH resins useful in this invention include resins having
a copolymerized ethylene content of about 20 to about 60 mole %, especially about
25 to about 50 mole %. Copolymers of lower than about 15 to 20 mole % ethylene tend
to be difficult to extrude while those above about 60 or 65 mole % ethylene have reduced
oxygen barrier performance. These polymers will have a saponification degree of at
least about 90%, especially at least about 95%. A degree of saponification of less
than about 90% results in inferior oxygen barrier properties. The ethylene vinyl alcohol
copolymer may include as an optional comonomer other olefins such as propylene, butene-1,
pentene-1, or 4-methylpentene-1 in such an amount as to not change the inherent properties
of the copolymer, that is, usually in an amount of up to about 5 mole % based on the
total copolymer. The melting points of these ethylene vinyl alcohol polymers are generally
between about 160° and 190°C.
[0018] Ethylene vinyl alcohol polymers are normally prepared by copolymerization of ethylene
with vinyl acetate, followed by hydrolysis of the vinyl acetate component to give
the vinyl alcohol group. This process is well known in the art.
[0019] The second component of the present invention is a polyamide component. The polyamide
component comprises about 5 to about 95 percent by weight of the total composition
of EVOH plus polyamide, preferably about 15 to about 70 percent, and most preferably
about 15 to about 30 percent. The polyamide component is itself a blend of amorphous
polyamide with semicrystalline polyamide. In particular, blends of about 35 to about
95 percent of at least one amorphous polyamide with 5 to 65 percent by weight of at
least one semicrystalline polyamide are suitable, and blends in which the amorphous
polyamide comprise about 50 to about 80 percent by weight of the polyamide component
are preferred.
[0020] The term "amorphous polyamide" is well known to those skilled in the art. "Amorphous
polyamide," as used herein, refers to those polyamides which are lacking in crystallinity
as shown by the lack of an endotherm crystalline melting peak in a Differential Scanning
Calorimeter ("DSC") measurement (ASTM D-3417), 10C°/minute.
[0021] Examples of the amorphous polyamides that can be used include those amorphous polymers
prepared from the following diamines: hexamethylenediamine, 2-methylpentamethylenediamine,
2,2,4-trimethylhexamethylenediamine, 2,4,4-trimethylhexamethylenediamine, bis(4-aminocyclohexyl)methane,
2,2-bis(4-aminocyclohexyl)isopropylidine, 1,4-diaminocyclohexane, 1,3-diaminocyclohexane,
meta-xylylenediamine, 1,5-diaminopentane, 1,4-diaminobutane, 1,3-diaminopropane, 2-ethyldiaminobutane,
1,4-diaminomethylcyclohexane, p-xylylenediamine, m-phenylenediamine, p-phenylenediamine,
and alkyl substituted m-phenylenediamine and p-phenylenediamine.
[0022] Examples of polyamides that can be used include those amorphous polymers prepared
from the following dicarboxylic acids: isophthalic acid, terephthalic acid, alkyl
substituted iso- and terephthalic acid, adipic acid, sebacic acid, butane dicarboxylic
acid, and the like.
[0023] Polyamides prepared from aliphatic diamines with aliphatic diacids are the traditional
semicrystalline nylons (also referred to as crystalline nylons) and are not amorphous
polyamides. Polyamides prepared from aromatic diamines and aromatic diacids are also
known. However, certain of these all-aromatic polyamides are known to be intractable
under ordinary melt processing conditions, and thus are not normally suitable. Thus
the preferred amorphous polyamides are those in which either the diamine or the diacid
moiety is aromatic, and the other moiety is aliphatic. The aliphatic groups of these
polyamides preferably contain 4-8 carbon atoms in a chain or an aliphatic cyclic ring
system having up to 15 carbon atoms. The aromatic groups of the polyamides preferably
have mono or bicyclic aromatic rings which may contain aliphatic substituents of up
to about 6 carbon atoms.
[0024] Specific examples of amorphous polyamides which are suitable for this invention include:
hexamethylenediamine isophthalamide, hexamethylenediamine isophthalamide/terephthalamide
terpolymer, having iso/terephthalic moiety ratios of 100/0 to 60/40, mixtures of of
2,2,4- and 2,4,4-trimethylhexamethylenediamine terephthalamide, copolymers of hexamethylene
diamine and 2-methylpentamethylenediame with iso- or terephthalic acids, or mixtures
of these acids. Polyamides based on hexamethylenediamine iso/terephthalamide containing
high levels of terephthalic acid moiety may also be useful provided a second diamine
such as 2-methyldiaminopentane is incorporated to produce a processible amorphous
polymer.
[0025] The above amorphous polyamides may contain as comonomers minor amounts of lactam
species such as caprolactam or lauryl lactam, even though polymers based on these
monomers alone are not amorphous. The important feature is that the polyamide as a
whole must be amorphous. Thus small amounts of these comonomers may be incorporated
as long as they do not impart crystallinity to the polyamide. In addition, up to about
10 weight % of a liquid or solid plasticizer such as glycerol, sorbitol, mannitol,
or aromatic sulfonamide compounds (such as "Santicizer 8" from Monsanto) may be included
with the amorphous polyamide.
[0026] For most applications the T
g of the amorphous polyamide (as measured in the dry state, i.e., containing about
0.12 weight % moisture or less) should be in the range of about 60°C to about 160°C,
and preferably about 80°C to about 130°C. Certain unblended amorphous polyamides,
as described above, have T
gs of around 125°C when dry. The lower limit on T
g is not clearly demarked and is not believed to be critical; 60°C is an approximate
lower limit. The upper limit on the T
g is likewise not clearly demarked. But amorphous polyamides with T
g above about 160°C are not readily thermoformable when used as a barrier layer. Thus
all-aromatic polyamides, having aromatic groups in both acid and amine moieties, tend
to have a T
g which is too high to permit thermoforming, and are thus normally unsuitable for the
purposes of this invention.
[0027] The polyamide component also includes at least one selected semicrystalline polyamide.
The term "semicrystalline polyamide" refers to the traditional semicrystalline nylons,
which are generally prepared from lactams or amino acids or from condensation of diamines
such as hexamethylene diamine with dibasic acids, such as sebacic acids. Copolymers
and terpolymers of these polyamides are also included, as are blends of two or more
semicrystalline polyamides. The polyamides of the present invention, both semicrystalline
and amorphous, are prepared by condensation polymerization or anhydrous polymerization,
which are well known to those skilled in the art.
[0028] However, not all semicrystalline nylons are suitable for the present invention. The
suitable nylons are those which have a methylene group/amide group ratio in the range
of about 5.5 to about 7.5, preferably about 5.7 to about 6.7. This ratio is defined
as the ratio of methylene (CH₂) groups to amide (CONH) groups in the polymer. For
example, a polyamide prepared from caprolactam (nylon 6) has monomer units of -(CH₂)₅CONH-
, thus having 5 methylene groups for each amide group and a ratio of 5 (= n-1, where
n is the number of carbon atoms). In a polyamide formed from condensation of a diacid
and a diamine, the ratio is calculated as (n + m - 2)/2, where n and m are the number
of carbon atoms in the diacid and diamine moieties. Thus for nylon 610 the ratio is
7. Examples of suitable semicrystalline nylons include nylon 69, nylon 610, copolymers
of caprolactam and laurolactam with comonomer weight ratios of 85/15 to 45/55, copolymers
of nylon 6 and nylon 69 with weight ratio range 50/50 to 0/100, copolymers of nylon
66 and nylon 610 with weight ratio range 70/30 to 0/100, and other combinations of
copolymers or terpolymers. Blends containing semicrystalline nylons which have a methylene/amide
ratio of less than about 5.5 do not exhibit the desired thermal stability; those with
semicrystalline nylons having a ratio of greater than about 7.5 have poorer thermoforming
properties.
[0029] The blends of the present invention comprise about 5 to about 95 percent by weight
EVOH and about 95 to about 5 percent by weight of the polyamide blend described above.
When less than about 5% of the polyamide blend is used, the improvements in formability
imparted by the invention are not fully realized. When more than about 95% of the
polyamide blend is used the oxygen barrier properties of the blend are degraded. And
when the polyamide blend itself comprises more than about 65% semicrystalline polyamide,
the oxygen barrier properties and processability are reduced. Preferably such blends
will contain about 30 to about 85 weight % EVOH and about 70 to about 15% weight percent
polyamide blend component. Of course, small amounts of other material such as other
polymers, processing aids, antioxidants, fillers, pigments, etc. may be included in
the blend without destroying the essence of this invention.
[0030] The blends of the present invention may be prepared by blending techniques well known
in the art, including the use of single or twin screw melt processors or extruders.
Blending is performed at temperatures sufficiently high to form a uniform melt of
the components to be blended, typically about 200° to about 225°C, above the melting
points of the two components. The blends of the present invention may be prepared
by blending EVOH and a preblended mixture of amorphous polyamide and semicrystalline
polyamide. Alternatively, they may be prepared by blending the three components simultaneously.
The former procedure is preferred for reducing the processing temperature when the
semicrystalline polyamide has a high melting point, i.e., higher than about 225°C
and for attaining superior thermal stability.
[0031] The blends of the present invention may be formed into a film, which may be done
by typical equipment such as extrusion casting or blown film lines, which may be uniaxially
or biaxially oriented, if desired, by known techniques.
[0032] In addition, multiple layer structures which contain one or more layers of the blend
of the present invention may be prepared. These structures may be incorporated into
containers, which take advantage of the oxygen barrier properties of the blend of
the present invention. In making multilayer containers, a structural layer will often
be used, to provide structural support for the blend layer. The materials used for
the structural layers may be made, for example, from any of a variety of structural
polymers. Examples of such structural polymers include polyolefins such as polybutylene,
polypropylene (either homopolymers or copolymers with ethylene), polyethylene homopolymer
or co- or terpolymers of ethylene with other monomers such as vinyl acetate, carboxylic
acids, such as acrylic acid, or methacrylic acid (with or without neutralization to
form ionomers), polyethylene terephthalate or its copolymers, and polymers based on
vinyl chloride or styrene, and the like.
[0033] The various layers of such multiple layer structures may be held together by any
of a variety of adhesive resins. In general, such adhesive resins are thermoplastic
polymers having carbonyl groups derived from functional groups of free carboxylic
acids, carboxylic acid salts, carboxylic acid esters, carboxylic acid amides, carboxylic
anhydrides, carbonic acid esters, urethanes, ureas or the like. In these thermoplastic
polymers, the carbonyl group concentration may be changed in a broad range, but in
general, it is preferred to use a thermoplastic polymer containing carbonyl groups
at a concentration of 10 to 1400 millimoles per 100 g of the polymer. Suitable adhesive
resins include polyolefins modified with at least one ethylenically unsaturated monomer
selected from unsaturated carboxylic acids and anhydrides, esters and amides thereof,
especially polypropylene, high density polyethylene, low density polyethylene and
ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymers modified with at least one member selected from
acrylic acid, methacrylic acid, crotonic acid, fumaric acid, itaconic acid, maleic
anhydride, itaconic anhydride, citraconic anhydride, ethyl acrylate, methyl methacrylate,
ethyl maleate, 2-ethylhexyl acrylate, acrylamide, methacrylamide, fatty acid amides,
and imides of the acids described above. The adhesive can also be prepared from an
ethylene polymer and a second polymer grafted with maleic anhydride, as disclosed
in U.S. Pat. 4,230,830, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
In addition, as the adhesive resin, there can be used ethylene-acrylate copolymers,
ionomers, polyalkylene oxide-polyester block copolymers, carboxymethyl cellulose derivatives,
and blends of these polymers with polyolefins.
[0034] It has been discovered that the blends of this invention can be used to make films
and multiple layer structures which not only have excellent oxygen barrier properties,
but also exhibit superior deformation characteristics. These structures can be deformed,
stretched into biaxially oriented film, or thermoformed into shaped containers without
occurrence of breaks or discontinuities in the EVOH blend layer, in contrast to the
behavior of multilayer structures involving either EVOH by itself, or EVOH blended
with crystalline polyamides. These structures, furthermore, can achieve a high degree
of deformation, orientation, thermoforming, or stretching in any form, in a broad
temperature range, in contrast to the behavior of either EVOH alone, EVOH blended
with crystalline polyamide, or even EVOH blended with amorphous polyamide. Furthermore,
the thermal stability of the present blends is dramatically improved compared with
similar compositions either without the amorphous polyamide or in which the selected
semicrystalline polyamide is replaced by another polyamide.
[0035] While not wishing to be bound by any particular theory, it is believed that certain
of the improvements of the present invention can be partially understood by considering
the microscopic structure of blends of EVOH with polyamides. Electron microscopy shows
that blends of EVOH and the present mixture of polyamides form at least a two-phase
system. The heterogeneous structure of such blends is important to attain good deformation
capability and barrier properties. In contrast, blends of EVOH and semicrystalline
nylon with CH₂/CONH ratio of less than about 5.5 appear to be microscopically miscible
and it is difficult to separately distinguish the components microscopically. It is
believed that under melt processing conditions the diffusion of such miscible semicrystalline
nylons into the EVOH leads to thermal stability problems. Use of polyamides with CH₂/CONH
ratios of the present invention greatly avoids this problem because of reduced or
lack of miscibility of the nylon with EVOH. At the lower end of the range of the present
invention, i.e. ratios of 5.5 to about 6, blends of the nylon with EVOH begin to show
phase separation and distinct nylon domains. For example, a blend made under good
mixing conditions with a nylon having a ratio of 5.7 exhibits nylon domains about
0.1 to 0.2 micrometers in diameter. At higher ratios, a clear two-phase system results.
For example, blends of nylon 69 (ratio 6.5) or nylon 610 (ratio 7.0) with EVOH clearly
exhibit two-phase systems indicating substantial immiscibility. When the CH₂/CONH
ratio significantly exceeds about 7.5, however, the nylon is generally ineffective
in attaining the objectives of the present invention.
EXAMPLES
Examples 1-8 and Comparative Examples C1-C7
[0036] These examples illustrate the superior thermal stability of compositions of the present
invention. Blends were made from an ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer, an amorphous
polyamide, and a semicrystalline nylon, as indicated in Table I. In this Table, APA1
is an amorphous polyamide prepared by the condensation of hexamethylenediamine with
70% isophthalic acid and 30 % terephthalic acid, having a melt flow index (230°C)
of 3.5 dg/min and an inherent viscosity of 0.82. APA2 is an amorphous polyamide prepared
by the condensation of hexamethylenediamine with 70 % isophthalic acid and 30 % terephthalic
acid, having a melt flow index (230°C) of 4.1 dg/min and an inherent viscosity of
0.76.
[0037] After blending, the thermal stability of the compositions was evaluated by subjecting
the samples to Haake mixing. In a typical run, a sample of 50 grams was mixed in a
Haake mixer (Haake Buchler Instruments, Inc., Rheocord™ System 40), at 230°C for 30
minutes and 50 r.p.m. The melt flow index (in dg/min, run at 230°C after a 5 minute
heating time) and the gel content of the sample after Haake treatment are reported
in Table I. For measurement of gel content, the samples were dissolved in a hot water/isopropanol
mixture (50:50%) and filtered through a 200 mesh (0.074 mm) screen to retain undissolved
gel. The results in Table I show that the compositions of the present invention exhibit
much improved thermal stability compared with examples in which the amorphous polyamide
is eliminated or in which the semicrystalline nylon has a methylene/amide ratio of
less than about 5.5. (Comparative Examples C4 and C5 have a ratio greater than 7.5;
they exhibit adequate stability but poorer orientation properties, as will be seen
in Table II.)

Examples 9-18 and Comparative Examples C8-C11
[0038] Multilayer coextruded structures were prepared using certain of the compositions
from Table I or other compositions as indicated as a barrier layer along with a structural
layer as defined in Table II. Three single screw extruders, a combining adapter, and
a 35 cm wide single manifold sheeting die were used. The two symmetrically arranged
surface layers, each 0.2 to 0.3 mm thick, were extruded on a 38 mm single screw extruder.
L/D = 24. Two symmetrically arranged adhesive layers, each 0.02 to 0.04 mm thick,
were extruded using a 32 mm single screw extruder, L/D - 24. The sample core layers
were extruded on a 25 mm single screw extruder, L/D = 24, equipped with a grooved
feed section. The thicknesses of the barrier layer and the overall sheet before and
after stretching are reported in Table II (presented in the format barrier thickness/overall
thickness).
[0039] Thereafter the multilayer structures were biaxially oriented with a film stretcher
(manufactured by T. M. Long Co.) under the conditions indicated in Table II. The drawing
was simultaneous in the machine and transverse directions, except where indicated,
at a rate of 4000% /minute. The oxygen transmission rate (in mL/m²-24 hours-atmosphere
at 30°C) of the oriented film was measured at a given moisture condition according
to ASTM D-3985. The quality of the oriented film was also visually evaluated and rated
on a scale of A-D, where A indicates a uniformly drawn film with extremely high transparency,
B indicates uniform drawing, but slight haze, C indicates noticeable irregularity
with neckdown in barrier layer, and D indicates breakdown in the core layer and complete
loss of barrier property.

1. A blend consisting essentially of:
(a) about 5 to about 95 percent by weight of an ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer having
a copolymerized ethylene content of about 20 to about 60 mole percent and a degree
of saponification of at least about 90 %, and
(b) about 95 to about 5 percent by weight of a polyamide blend consisting essentially
of
(i) about 35 to about 95 percent by weight of at least one amorphous polyamide having
a glass transition temperature of up to about 160°C and
(ii) about 5 to about 65 percent by weight of at least one semicrystalline polyamide
which has a methylene group/amide group ratio in the range of about 5.5 to about 7.5
and which forms separate domains when blended with said ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer.
2. The blend of claim 1 wherein the semicrystalline polyamide is selected from the group
consisting of nylon 69, nylon 610, copolymers of caprolactam and laurolactam with
comonomer weight ratios of about 85/15 to about 45/55, copolymers of nylon 6 and nylon
69 with weight ratios of about 50/50 to 0/100, and copolymers of nylon 66 and nylon
610 with weight ratios of about 70/30 to 0/100.
3. The blend of claim 1 or claim 2 wherein the amorphous polyamide is selected from the
group consisting of hexamethylenediamine isophthalamide, hexamethylenediamine isophthalamide/terephthalamide
terpolymer, having isophthalic/terephthalic moiety ratios of 100/0 to 60/40, mixtures
of of 2,2,4- and 2,4,4-trimethylhexamethylenediamine terephthalamide, copolymers of
hexamethylenediamine and 2-methylpentamethylenediamine with iso- or terephthalic acids,
or mixtures of these acids.
4. The blend of claim 1, 2 or 3 wherein the ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer is present
at about 30 to about 85 percent by weight, the polyamide blend is present at about
15 to about 70 percent by weight, and the amorphous polyamide comprises about 50 to
about 80 percent by weight of the polyamide blend.
5. The blend of any one of claims 1 to 4 wherein the ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymer
contains about 25 to about 50 mole percent copolymerized ethylene and has a degree
of saponification of at least about 95 percent.
6. A film prepared from the blend of any of claims 1-5.
7. A multiple layer structure wherein at least one of the layers is prepared from the
blend of any of claims 1-5.
8. The multiple layer structure of claim 7 wherein at least one of the layers is a structural
polymer selected from the group consisting of polybutylene, polypropylene, polypropylene
copolymers with ethylene, polyethylene, polyethylene copolymers, copolymers of ethylene
with vinyl acetate, copolymers of ethylene with carboxylic acids wherein the carboxylic
acid is unneutralized or is neutralized to form an ionomer, polyethylene terephthalate,
polymers based on vinyl chloride, polymers based on styrene, and blends of such polymers.
9. The multiple layer structure of claim 7 or 8 which also contains at least one layer
of adhesive.
10. A formed structure prepared by thermoforming the multiple layer structure of claim
7, 8 or 9.
11. An oriented multilayer film wherein at least one layer is the blend of any one of
claims 1 to 5.